Word Of The Day

  • Supine
    • Today's Word

    Supine

    Supine


    SOO-pyne

    Definition

    (adjective) Failing to act or resist; passive and yielding, especially when action is urgently needed.

    Example

    The board’s supine response to the mounting crisis — endless meetings, no decisions, no accountability — allowed a manageable problem to become a catastrophic one.

    Word Origin

    Supine derives from the Latin supinus, meaning “lying face upward” or “thrown backward,” rooted in the same base as sub- (“under”). It entered English in the 15th century with both its literal meaning — lying flat on one’s back — and its figurative sense of moral or intellectual passivity. The physical image is the etymology: a person flat on their back, facing the sky, unable or unwilling to rise and meet what’s coming.

    Fun Fact

    The Roman Senate’s increasingly supine relationship with Julius Caesar is considered by historians to be one of the pivotal failures of the Roman Republic. As Caesar accumulated unprecedented power — declaring himself dictator perpetuo, or dictator in perpetuity — senators who had the authority and the votes to resist instead did nothing, each waiting for someone else to act first. By the time a group finally did act on the Ides of March in 44 BCE, it was too late to save the Republic they were trying to protect. The assassination triggered a civil war that ended with Augustus becoming Rome’s first emperor — proving that supine inaction can be just as consequential as any decision ever made.

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